"The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, America's oldest museum and school of fine arts, was founded in 1805. Today, the Academy boasts one of the nation's finest collections of American art and a roster of alumni representing the greatest artists this country has produced. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with the show held at 1984. Curator Stephen Neil Greengard introduces the catalogue by quoting D.H. Lawrence's character Loerke: "Today art must interpret industry, just as it once interpreted religion. ... [details]
Exhibition catalogue published in conjunction with show held September 7 - November 4, 1990, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Traveled December 4, 1990 - January 27, 1991, J.B. Speed Art Museum of Fine Arts, Massachusetts; March 3 - May 19, 1991, Springfield Museum of Fine Arts, Massachusetts; June 8 - August 4, 1991, San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art, Caligornia; September 28 - November 17, 1991, Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester, New York. ... [details]
Issue edited by Al Goldstein. Cover art by Haruo. Essays "Screw You," by Al Goldstein; "Self-Abuse : Shame or Sin?" by Prof. Harold Harrison Foote, M.D.; "My Scene : Mouthful of Miracles," by Jimmy Owens; "Sex Scene," edited by David Reitman; "Homosexual Citizen : Look Homeward, Faggot," by Jack Nichols; "Fuckbooks : For Gracious Snakes," by Michael Perkins; "Dirty Diversions : All Dresden up and No Place to Go," by Al Goldstein; "Naked City," edited by Anthony Gambino; "Shit List," by Al Goldstein; "Watson's Weirdness," by Christopher Watson. [details]
January 1971 issue of Studio International, edited by Peter Townsend. Contents include: "Pay at the turnstile;" "A Policy for the arts," by Lord Eccles talks to Edward Lucie-Smith; "Kokoschka's early work," a conversation between the artist and Wolfgang Fischer; "Correspondence;" "News and Notes;" "Leger's city, and Atget's," by Jonathan Benthall; "The Vienna Secession and its early relations with Great Britain," by Horst-Herbert Kossatz; "Ends and Beginnings: Viennese art at the turn of the century," by Frank Whitford; "Four sculptors (part 4): David Smith," by William Tucker; "Art on TV," by Charles Harrison; "Forces against object-based art," by Andrew Forge; and "New York commentary: Downtown, Uptown, all around the town," by Dore Ashton. ... [details]
Poster published in conjunction with the San Francisco Public Library's presentation of a free afternoon of "live poetry and literary memory," held at Koret Auditorium, Main Public Library, San Francisco, October 2, 2005, in commemoration of the fifty year anniversary of "6 Poets at Six Gallery," a reading originally held October 7, 1955 in San Francisco at which Allen Ginsberg read an early draft of "Howl. ... [details]